Famous Firsts #3 - The United States

Guess these American people, places, and things that came first.
One question from Wolfcam's First Person quiz
Quiz by Quizmaster
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Last updated: September 13, 2018
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First submittedMay 27, 2018
Times taken11,387
Average score59.1%
Rating4.11
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Answer
U.S. State
Delaware
Team to win the Super Bowl
Green Bay Packers
Black Major League player (modern era)
Jackie Robinson
Signer of the U.S. Declaration of Independence
John Hancock
National park
Yellowstone
College in the U.S.
Harvard
City to have a Starbucks
Seattle
American to orbit Earth
John Glenn
Permanent English colony in North America
Jamestown
Woman to fly solo across the Atlantic
Amelia Earhart
College football bowl game
Rose Bowl
Catholic U.S. President
John F. Kennedy
"American Idol" winner
Kelly Clarkson
Person with a net worth over $1 billion
John D. Rockefeller
Person with a net worth over $100 billion
Jeff Bezos
African-American woman with a net worth over $1 billion
Oprah Winfrey
Female Supreme Court justice
Sandra Day O'Connor
Black Supreme Court justice
Thurgood Marshall
U.S. Civil War battle
Battle of Fort Sumter
Person to assassinate a U.S. President
John Wilkes Booth
American woman in space
Sally Ride
U.S. city to host the Olympics
St. Louis
+5
Level 74
May 27, 2018
I don't know much about sports but I actually would have gotten the first super bowl correct (shockingly) if I had said Packers instead of just Green Bay. Bummer.
+1
Level 84
Nov 4, 2018
That was my first answer too - should be city or team, in my opinion.
+3
Level 75
Nov 4, 2018
I tried Green Bay first, also, but I knew it was the correct answer because I watched it with my dad. (We could only get one TV channel back then - CBS - so I had no choice.) Because of that I realized I had to add Packers, but I agree, city or team should be enough. BTW, it wasn't called the Super Bowl then, only the AFL-NFL championship game.
+5
Level 85
May 29, 2018
I put "First Battle of Bull Run", because I wasn't sure that Fort Sumter was big enough to be considered a battle. Zero casualties? May all battles be thus.
+2
Level 77
Jun 4, 2018
That's pretty commonly taught that the battle of Ft. Sumpter was really what kicked off the US civil war. Casualties or not, it was obviously an important event that changed American history.
+3
Level 72
Jun 10, 2018
12 out of 22, happy enough with that as a Brit. I have no idea on American sport or American Idol (I couldn't tell you the UK idol equivalent either).

Interesting quiz though.

+2
Level 79
Aug 4, 2018
Agree with kapulani3, you should accept "Green Bay".
+2
Level 67
Nov 4, 2018
I agree. I think the city should be enough if a given sport only has one team in that city, *especially* Green Bay because the only reason most people know it exists is that the Packers play there.
+1
Level 68
Nov 4, 2018
I was guessing Olympics host cities and got the answer for Starbucks.
+1
Level 86
Nov 4, 2018
Ah yes, the St. Louis Olympics. The one that was so bad, they almost stopped having them. https://www.thesportsbank.net/history/dumbest-worst-olympics-event-ever-1904-st-louis-marathon/
+1
Level 67
Nov 5, 2018
I thought the lost colony of Roanoke was the first English settlement in North America
+2
Level 63
Nov 5, 2018
The question says the first permanent settlement, which doesn't count Roanoke because it, obviously, wasn't permanent.
+1
Level 81
Feb 2, 2021
Hmmm, according to Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harbour_Grace), Harbour Grace in Canada would be the first permanent English settlement in North America, established even before Roanoke.
+1
Level 90
Aug 31, 2023
Wow, I had never heard this before. I checked out the Wikipedia article and noted that the Harbour Grace airfield was the starting point of Amelia Earhart's solo trans-Atlantic flight.
+1
Level 74
Nov 5, 2018
It is, perhaps, worth noting that the distinction of first permanent English settlement in the New World nearly fell to St. John's, Newfoundland. Explorer Sir Humphrey Gilbert declared it as such in 1583, but was subsequently lost at sea, and so plans to settle the area were delayed until after 1620. Canada foiled again!
+1
Level 66
Jun 14, 2019
got yellowstone, harvard, oprah and earhart and seriously allways used to think she was british, her being american hadnt even crossed my mind.

I would ve expected the scores to be much higher though, this being an all american quiz. With reasonably significant questions.

+1
Level 92
Sep 11, 2020
I am both shocked and impressed that I got them all.
+1
Level 79
Jun 11, 2022
Oprah Winfrey, is not first African American woman to achieved net worth of $1 billion. Sheila Crump Johnson holds that title but she is not as famous as Oprah.

Sheila Crump Johnson (born January 25, 1949) is an American businesswoman, co-founder of BET, CEO of Salamander Hotels and Resorts, and the first African-American woman to attain a net worth of at least one billion dollars. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

+1
Level 66
Aug 28, 2022
Could you accept Havard for Harvard please? Many USA accents pronounce it with a quiet R sound.
+1
Level 67
Oct 8, 2022
Knowing absolutely nothing about American football, for me the question 'College football bowl game' conjured up strange images of people kicking round a bowl. I then figured it must have something to do with the prize but that didn't help:)
+1
Level 76
Jul 21, 2023
It would be nice to just stick with firsts, without adding a demographic, especially when it's the same couple of identifiers.
+1
Level 78
Mar 7, 2024
It would wouldn't it. But non-white males are rarely first historically in achievement because of the question of opportunity. I think these secondary demographical criteria remain valid.